The suburban US office that brokered lucrative military contracts with Australia
Located alongside neighbours that include an escape room and a karate studio, it's a surprisingly low-key location for a firm that describes itself as 'the premier aerospace and defense boutique consulting firm' offering the services of 'over 700+ [sic] retired generals, [and] admirals'.
For years the company has acted as a conduit for highly paid advice to the Australian government from a raft of retired senior US navy and defence personnel who charge thousands of dollars a day. And there are likely to be further rich pickings ahead, as the AUKUS pact moves the Royal Australian Navy towards a nuclear-powered submarine fleet (albeit at a grindingly slow pace) and government dollars start to flow from upskilling a workforce, and building the infrastructure, to enter the nuclear domain.
The depth and duration of Burdeshaw's relationship with Canberra's defence establishment is striking.
Records on the federal government's Austender site reveal that the Australian Defence Department has struck contracts worth at least $11.7 million with Burdeshaw over the past decade for 'strategic planning consultation services'.
A further $1.5 million deal was signed between the company and the Prime Minister's Department in 2021 for advice to then prime minister Scott Morrison. That's $13.2 million flowing through Burdeshaw's books courtesy of the Australian taxpayer over the past decade, including its most recent three-year contract with Defence, valued at $1.2 million, and dated February this year.
However, a request to the Defence Department to provide a comprehensive list of the names and roles of personnel hired under the Burdeshaw contracts has been stymied, with Defence citing 'security and commercial-in-confidence reasons'.
Burdeshaw and its principal, lawyer Alex Heidt, have also failed to respond to numerous attempts by this masthead to elicit further information.
A visit revealed that Burdeshaw shares its premises with Heidt's law firm. A large painting of the late general William M. Hartzog, a former chief executive of the company, adorns the wall, and a stack of Heidt's awards from Lawyers of Distinction are assembled on a desk by the front door. An employee, Tyler Heidt (Alex Heidt's son), wanted to know if this masthead had security clearance, and when told no, said the dealings with Defence were confidential.
Even on the limited information publicly available, Burdeshaw's record shows the deep involvement by senior retired US Navy personnel in confidential deliberations about the capabilities of the Royal Australian Navy, particularly as Australia pivoted towards the AUKUS submarine deal under Morrison.
As investigative journalist Andrew Fowler noted in his book Nuked, by the time Morrison had junked the deal to buy conventional French submarines and replaced it in September 2021 with the AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine pact with America and Britain, 'US senior military officials were liberally sprinkled across the highest levels of the administration'.
By late 2022 – the last time Defence made figures readily available to a federal parliamentary committee – no less than eight retired senior US Navy officers were providing well-paid advice to the Australian Defence Department, among them, an admiral, a vice admiral, a rear admiral, a commander and four captains. All were either advising on 'naval shipbuilding' or on managing the transition of the RAN submarine fleet to a nuclear-powered future.
It is unclear how many were on contracts negotiated through Burdeshaw. (At least two senior retired US Navy figures appear to have struck their own deals with the Australian Defence Department under separate consultancy companies they set up.)
Defence also refused to provide updated figures on how many foreign nationals are working on AUKUS-related programs. In response to questions, a spokesperson said the department needed 'the support and expertise of the US and the UK to deliver AUKUS' and that 'all personnel regardless of nationality, are subject to appropriate security clearance requirements and operate under strict contractual obligations'.
Burdeshaw first came to public notice in 2022, when The Washington Post published an investigation revealing more than half a dozen former US Navy and civilian navy leaders were playing advisory roles at senior levels of the Australian defence hierarchy in the lead-up to AUKUS.
The Post named six former navy admirals and Dr Donald C. Winter, a onetime US Navy secretary to George W. Bush. Winter had been a key member of the Australian government's high-level Naval Shipbuilding Advisory Board as far back as 2016, before being handpicked by Morrison to help drive AUKUS forward in September 2021.
Documents unearthed by the Post show Winter's services were being provided via Burdeshaw in late 2021 for $US6000 ($9318) a day, plus expenses.
In 2022, specialist industry publication Australian Defence Magazine highlighted the 'significant American influence in Australia's defence capability decision-making'.
It noted the Defence Department's submarine advisory committee included two senior US shipbuilding industry figures: Jim Hughes and retired US admiral Kirkland Donald.
Hughes was a former vice president of submarines at US shipbuilder Newport News Shipbuilding (which makes Virginia-class submarines of the type Australia is now seeking to acquire from the US before it gears up to make its own).
Loading
Donald sat on Australia's top-level submarine advisory committee from 2017, while he was also on the board of and subsequently chairing US nuclear submarine builder Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII), which owns Newport News. He eventually stepped down from the Australian advisory committee in April 2022, citing a potential conflict of interest. This masthead is not suggesting there was a conflict of interest.
Defence officials later insisted he'd declared his HII role and 'in his capacity as a member of the submarine advisory committee he did not provide advice on nuclear-powered submarines'.
In 2018-19, former US Navy rear admiral Stephen E. Johnson was appointed a deputy secretary inside the Australian Department of Defence, one of the most senior positions in the nation's security hierarchy.
Former US Navy vice admiral William 'Willy' Hilarides, a veteran of 35 years in the American service, was also deeply embedded in Australian defence advisory structures for years.
A former head of the US Navy's ship and sustainment program, Hilarides sat as a key member of the Australian Naval Shipbuilding Advisory Board for four years before becoming chair of its successor body, the Naval Shipbuilding Expert Advisory Panel, in 2021.
Figures provided by the Defence Department to a Senate committee in late 2022 put the value of Hilarides' contracts – negotiated through Burdeshaw – at $1.9 million. Subsequently, this masthead reported he received $2.4 million for his role on the two advisory panels.
Head of the Defence Department Greg Moriarty told the Senate that Hilarides had played no role in the Morrison government's decision to scrap the French submarine contract in 2021.
In 2023, the Albanese government handed Hilarides a new role, heading a review to advise on achieving 'complementarity' between Australia's surface navy fleet and the AUKUS submarines.
Labor Defence Minister Richard Marles has defended the extensive use of advice from former top-ranking US Navy officers, telling this masthead in 2023, 'where we have sought advice from those former officials in the US Navy, that has been on issues of profound importance for our nation's future'.
Others have questioned how genuinely objective such advice could have been, even with the best intentions.
Gary Slater, a former American marine turned consultant for local lobbyist ADCG, says 'there's a good and a bad to it: the good is that you're getting access to global expertise. And the bad is a perception ... that you're paying consultant rates for retired officers to give you advice that is not necessarily in Australia's best interest'.
Rex Patrick, former South Australian senator and submariner, speculates that it appeared the department had wanted only one perspective. 'If you only seek counsel from US admirals, you'll only get a US answer. The department had the ability to reach out to other very experienced submarine-operating nations to bring different perspectives 'inside the tent'. They didn't.'
Defence's refusal to answer this masthead's questions about the Burdeshaw contracts stands in marked contrast to some of the detail it provided in past Senate estimates hearings.
Loading
In 2023, Defence Department secretary Moriarty confirmed that contracts for advice by another American, retired US Navy rear admiral Thomas Eccles, then stood at $1.2 million.
In early 2023, in written advice to Greens senator Jordon Steele-John, the department confirmed that the maximum amount payable on contracts relating to just three of the US Navy's former top brass – Hilarides, Eccles and Kirkland Donald – totalled close to $5.3 million.
The AUKUS pact faces a raft of challenges, not least the review now being undertaken by Pentagon Under Secretary of Defence for Policy Elbridge Colby. Finding the workforce to crew, build and maintain nuclear-powered submarines will pose a years-long challenge. However, one pool of labour that won't run dry any time soon is the pipeline of US and other consultants in waiting as the AUKUS project gathers momentum. Meanwhile, the federal government's Australian Submarine Agency is criss-crossing the globe at a seemingly frenetic pace. According to figures provided to the senate, between June last year and the end of January this year, its staff clocked up 218 international trips, at a total cost of around $3 million.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
26 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Penny Wong refuses to confirm whether she discussed Canberra woman charged with Chinese foreign interference with Beijing officials
Foreign Minister Penny Wong has refused to reveal whether she raised the case of a Chinese woman charged with foreign interference by the Australian Federal Police with Beijing officials. The AFP on Monday announced a Chinese woman had been charged with foreign interference over the alleged covert collection of sensitive information. The woman, an Australian permanent resident, was arrested and charged on Saturday after a series of police raids across Canberra. It is alleged the woman was acting on behalf of a public security bureau in China to secretly compile information about the Canberra Guan Yin Citta branch, a Buddhist sect that is outlawed in China. The woman is the third person to be charged under foreign interference laws that were rolled out in 2018, sparking concerns of rising tensions with China. Ms Wong on Tuesday morning repeatedly ruled out saying whether she or any government minister had broached the foreign interference case with Beijing officials and said Australia remained 'clear eyed' on China. 'I think we all are very clear eyed about China and its interests, we've made that clear,' she told Today show host Karl Stefanovic. 'And I'd make this point, we've never said that dialogue eliminates differences. Clearly it doesn't. The Foreign Minister also declined to make comments on the case and insisted Australia had 'strong frameworks around foreign interference.' "I can't comment on this specific case that's before the courts. But good try," Ms Wong said. She did not explicitly say whether she trusted China when pressed to do so and reiterated that China would pursue its interests regardless of Australian commentary. 'I trust China to do what China thinks is in its interest, and I trust Australia to do what's in our interests,' Ms Wong said. 'I think we all are very clear eyed about China and its interests; we've made that clear. 'The question is, how do we manage that? And dialogue and engagement is part of it. It doesn't eliminate differences, but it does enable us to put our views.' The case has sparked fears of newly inflamed tensions with China. AFP Assistant Commissioner Stephen Nutt on Monday alluded to the threat of espionage on Australian shores. 'At a time of permanent regional contest, offenders will attempt to spy on individuals, groups and institutions in Australia', he said in an apparent reference to Beijing. The woman's name cannot be revealed due to a temporary suppression order which was granted after her lawyer James Maher argued her safety would be put in jeopardy if her identity was not concealed. She was refused bail by Chief Magistrate Lorraine Walker, who agreed with prosecutors that the woman could be a potential flight risk. The offence of reckless foreign interference carrying a maximum sentence of 15 years imprisonment. ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess, whose agency provided the AFP with the information to launch their investigation, last week warned about the rising cost of espionage to the Australian economy, which he said amounted to $12.5 billion a year. He said that ASIO had foiled 24 significant espionage and interference operations in the past three years alone.

Sky News AU
35 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Nyrstar secures $135m bailout from federal, South Australia, Tasmania govts as it struggles with Chinese market distortion
An embattled metals producer will receive a $135m bailout from the federal, South Australian and Tasmanian governments as it struggles with alleged market distortions by China. Lead and zinc refiner Nyrstar, a global company which is a subsidiary of Singapore-headquartered commodities company Trafigura, has loss making ventures in South Australia's Port Pirie and in Hobart. It pushed for government assistance earlier this year amid concerns of going under. Local boss Matthew Howell has claimed that China is 'distorting global markets' and 'eroding global operating margins' which has 'imperilled the commercial viability of domestic processing' across Western nations. Industry Minister Tim Ayres and South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas addressed reporters on Tuesday to confirm it would back the company which directly employs 1400 workers and indirectly supports 6600 jobs, according to Nyrstar. Mr Ayres said the funds would enable Nyrstar to upgrade its facilities which Mr Howell had previously said needed refreshing to compete with China. 'The maintenance and engineering upgrades are going to require hundreds of additional workers as contractors here in Port Pirie and in Hobart,' he said on Tuesday. 'That's going to make a big difference in terms of the maintenance supply chains and the economic viability of this vital industrial community.' Mr Malinauskas said the South Australian government's contribution for the Port Pirie plant was crucial for setting the location up for a 'more prosperous future' as the industry faces domination by China. 'We know there is a journey in front of us to be able to tackle the challenges we see, particularly coming out of China,' the SA Premier said. 'We should be up-front and honest about them. When people contemplate - is this an appropriate investment on behalf of taxpayers? - one also has to think about the counterfactual. 'The counterfactual would be to allow the Western world to see China consolidate all of … the world's smelting capacity, which would mean that we don't get to participate in the critical mineral and critical metal supply chain of the future.' Mr Howell has claimed the Chinese government subsidises companies to purchase Australian materials at prices local smelters could not afford. China then subsidises the processing of these materials and enforces export controls on the finished metals. The practice was crippling Nyrstar's Australian operations, according to Mr Howell who in June warned its Port Pirie operation was losing tens of millions each month and needed urgent government help. Nyrstar's Global CEO Guido Janssen said the company was particularly appreciative of the help in 'the face of extremely challenging global market conditions'. 'This support demonstrates the strategic importance of the Australian operations for sovereign capability and delivering the products needed globally for modern economies,' Mr Janssen said. 'This announcement is a credit to the teamwork and excellence of our teams at Port Pirie and Hobart and is an important step forward as part of our global focus on increasing critical and strategic metals production.' The manufacturer will receive $57.5m from the federal government, $55m from South Australia and $22.5m from Tasmania. Nyrstar produces materials that are critical for batteries, flame retardants, semiconductors and solar panels amongst other items.

Herald Sun
42 minutes ago
- Herald Sun
Nick Papps appointed inaugural editor of The California Post
Don't miss out on the headlines from Victoria. Followed categories will be added to My News. Veteran News Corp Australia journalist Nick Papps has been appointed inaugural editor of The California Post – a soon-to-launch sister publication to the famed New York Post. In a statement released on Tuesday morning local time, the New York Post Media Group heralded the new media venture, with its content to appear across multiple platforms and formats, including mobile and desktop sites, video, audio, social media and a daily print edition. It will launch in early 2026. 'Now, more than ever, Californians need a media outlet dedicated to common sense, clever coverage of the most important issues, many of which are ignored or dismissed by current print and digital outlets,' the statement read. 'Despite its vibrancy – as well as the upcoming Olympic Games and World Cup – California lacks a voice that will hold leaders to account as they attempt to tackle the most critical issues facing residents. 'In fact, Los Angeles is fast becoming a news desert, despite being home to nearly 13 million monthly digital newsreaders. Thousands of stories are going untold and countless perspectives aren't being represented by a media ecosystem that has lost touch with the people – especially as the city and state face unprecedented challenges and leadership vacuums.' Papps, to be the new Los Angeles-based masthead's inaugural editor, is currently weekend editor of the Herald Sun. News Corp Australasia executive chairman Michael Miller described Papps as a 'talented' editor. 'Nick has built a great editorial career since starting out as a cadet reporter in Adelaide in 1992, and he has excelled in senior reporting and editing assignments in multiple cities,' Mr Miller said. 'Importantly for his new role, one of those cities is LA, where Nick was a correspondent for our Australian mastheads from 2004 to 2006, so he is returning to a town he knows and loves.' Herald Sun editor Sam Weir congratulated Papps. 'Nick has done a stellar job as weekend editor and played a vital role in making the Herald Sun the most-read masthead by Victorians across digital and print,' he said. 'Everyone in the newsroom wishes Nick all the success with this exciting opportunity'. News Corp chief executive Robert Thomson said the Californian market was currently 'starved' for serious reporting. 'Los Angeles and California surely need a daily dose of the Post as an antidote to the jaundiced, jaded journalism that has sadly proliferated,' Mr Thomson said. 'We are at a pivotal moment for the city and the state, and there is no doubt that the Post will play a crucial role in engaging and enlightening readers, who are starved of serious reporting and puckish wit. 'I am also pleased that (New York Post editor-in-chief) Keith Poole's remit is expanding, as he will now be responsible for covering not just New York, but California, the US, the world and, perhaps, Mars.' The California Post will operate as a separate entity under the New York Post Media Group, a subsidiary of News Corp, publisher of The Australian.